Rashford,UK Food Brand Giants to Tackle Child Food Poverty
Footballer
Marcus Rashford has formed a task force with some of the UK's biggest food
brands to try to help reduce child food poverty.
The
22-year-old Manchester United forward successfully campaigned to extend
free school meals this summer.
He has
written to MPs, outlining the help he feels some families still need.
They include
expanding the numbers who are eligible for free school meals - and offer them
free food and activities during school holidays in England.
Mr. Rashford
has spoken about his own experiences of using a food voucher scheme as a child
and was praised for pressing the government into a U-turn on the issue.
The group of
supermarkets, businesses, and charities - including Aldi, Asda, Co-op,
Deliveroo, FareShare, Food Foundation, Iceland, Kellogg's, Lidl, Sainsbury's,
Tesco and Waitrose - have formed a task force and backed proposals from the
National Food Strategy, an independent review of UK food policy.
The
taskforce is calling for three policy recommendations by the National Food
Strategy to be funded by the government as soon as possible:
Expanding
free school meals to every child from a household on Universal Credit or
equivalent, reaching an additional 1.5m children aged seven to 16
Expanding an
existing school holiday food and activities programme to support all children
on free school meals in all areas of England. instead of the current 50,000
children that are helped.

Increasing
the value of the Healthy Start vouchers - which help parents with children
under the age of four and pregnant women buy some basic foods - from £3.10 to
£4.25 per week, and expanding it to all those on Universal Credit or
equivalent, reaching an additional 290,000 people
The
taskforce says implementing the three recommendations would mark a
"unifying step to identifying a long-term solution to child poverty in the
UK".
Tara Brown,
50, receives Universal Credit and disability allowance for her nine-year-old
son, who has autism.
She says the
voucher scheme has been "brilliant" because he eats what she calls a
restrictive diet - so prefers consistent packed lunches to free cooked meals at
his school in Essex.
"It's
been nice to be able to get it so that I know it's not eating into my weekly
food budget that I put aside for our evening meals," she says.
She wants to
see vouchers become a permanent option for parents.
"I
think it should be down to parental choice as to whether the money goes direct
to the school or if the money goes via a voucher [for packed lunches] to the
parents," she adds.
"For
people that are, financially, in a much worse situation, who have children with
this sort of avoidance of foods, then the voucher scheme has probably been an
absolute godsend to them."

Mr Rashford
said he was "confident" the group could help change lives "for the
better".
Speaking to
BBC Breakfast, he said the move to extend free school meals over the summer had
been a "short-term solution" to stopping children from going hungry,
but it "wasn't going to work in the long run".
"We had
to think about the best way to do it, to think about how these families can eat
long term and not have any issues," he said.
Mr Rashford
is hoping that, with a bigger team of experts around him, he might be able to
help more children.
"We
wanted to do it the best way we could introduce the best people into our
group, and see if using them [we] can push it even more."
In his
letter to MPs, Mr. Rashford says he hopes the chancellor will find the funds to
do so in his Budget and spending review "without delay".
Schools
minister Nick Gibb said he would be delighted to meet Mr. Rashford, saying the
footballer was "right to draw the nation's attention" to the matter.
He told BBC
Breakfast the government shared Mr. Rashford's objective to alleviate child food
poverty and would look at the policy recommendations.
The first
report of the National Food Strategy, which was commissioned by the government
in 2019, aims to help create a food system in the UK that is healthy,
affordable and sustainable.
Food
entrepreneur Henry Dimbleby, who is leading the National Food Strategy review,
has said school meals are a "fantastic way" to get children eating
well at school.
"The
alternative to a school lunch is a packed lunch and only 1% of packed lunches
have the nutritional value of a school meal," he said.
"If you
look at packed lunches as children get less affluent, those packed lunches have
increasingly low nutritional value."
Speaking on
Breakfast, he said nutrition was the basis of equality of opportunity -
"you can't level up if you are not getting enough nutrition into your most
vulnerable children".
He added
that the status of food, dining halls and particularly school cooks needed to
be raised, saying they were "as important as any teacher".
Members of
the taskforce have also pledged to spend the next six weeks using their
platforms to share stories of those affected by child food insecurity in the
UK.
Richard
Walker, Iceland's managing director, said it was an issue they cared about
deeply and wanted to support Mr Rashford to effect positive change.
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